Re: Indian Muslims are the most disadvantage group in India
sal35, slave of allah, tahirbhai, yo_wasim and the late Aejaaz bhai.
There might be a few more.
Re: Indian Muslims are the most disadvantage group in India
sal35, slave of allah, tahirbhai, yo_wasim and the late Aejaaz bhai.
There might be a few more.
Re: Indian Muslims are the most disadvantage group in India
include me also
Re: Indian Muslims are the most disadvantage group in India
Nice name ;)
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
First Bangalore, now Lucknow and other towns in UP.
**Police clamp curfew on north Indian town following Hindu Muslim riots **
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
silly billy, stfu.
ps: silly tu fir uchhala.
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
ps: silly tu fir uchhala.
no point in tellling silly anything. if u remember, there was one thread which was something like "india: more malnourished than subcontinental africa"...something like that. we kept on accepting indias drawbacks but this silly aunty was in no mood to stop posting. Then one guy called Talwar came in the thread and another pakistani called Tmx struck in between. Man......that thread turned out to be awesome in the end! . Since then tmx hasn't come to this forum and talwar was banned after that
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
http://www.paklinks.com/gs/showthread.php?p=4118436#post4118436
this one i guess.
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
I’ll go through it.
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
oops…it was this one!
http://www.paklinks.com/gs/showthread.php?p=4118280#post4118280
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
yes its a place of discontent. If you got a problem dont go there.
. Besides I am not inviting you. India is better off without people like you. We have own sillybiilys to tackle.![]()
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
yes, hundreds of them.
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
chill folks no need to get personal here :)
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
You can invite him it will make no difference.
Re: Hindu activists riot in Bangalore
Not just last week, Bangalore, an otherwise peaceful city, has been rocked over the years by communal or linguistic issues - so says The Indian Express.
Brand Bangalore takes a hit again
Bangalore’s image as a peaceful infotech city has taken a severe beating after communal riots rocked the city for three consecutive days last week. While the Congress and Bharatiya Janata Party have been blaming each other for the clashes, some politicians, like former minister PGR Sindhia, have criticised the coalition government, led by Janata Dal (Secular), for its failure to check the riots. The citizens of Bangalore, however, blame politicians for the violence, in which a 12-year boy was killed in police firing and several vehicles and shops were set ablaze. Tension gripped East Bangalore after the first wave of violence broke out on January 19 when hundreds of people headed towards a local stadium for a meeting to protest the execution of former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein. The meeting was organised by a new forum, People’s Front, which has been floated by former Union minister and senior Congress leader CK Jaffer Sharief. Many people felt that the police department failed to assess the second wave of violence that broke out after a day on January 21, when Hindu organisations took a procession related to the Virat Hindu Mahasabha programme. The clashes clearly show a total lack of preparedness by the police to handle such a crisis and total lack of intelligence at the local level, say observers.
During the recent communal clashes, IT outsourcing firms were unaffected as most of them are located on the other side of the city. Yet these riots have added another sordid chapter to Bangalore’s history, which may making investors think twice before locating new projects in this once-hallowed IT destination. Not just last week, Bangalore, an otherwise peaceful city, has been rocked over the years by communal or linguistic issues. In 1991, a bandh for Cauvery water turned violent with majority locals turning against the Tamil linguistic minority. Then, the city came to a standstill when forest brigand Veerappan kidnapped Kannada superstar late Rajkumar. Again in 2006, Rajkumar’s death sparked off riots, killing eight persons. The increasing frequency of such incidents, coupled with issues related to poor infrastructure (that remain unresolved), could make investors look at other willing states to locate their investments.
Re: Indian Muslims are the most disadvantage group in India
Even India’s powerless and entirely secular Muslim President is not safe from attacks from Hindu hardliners.
Re: India - a failed Republic?
I think it is a scandal that 50,000 children are missing in India, but 1 million! shows that there is something seriously wrong - sick - in India. These kids have either been raped, killed or sold into the flesh trade.
Re: India - a failed Republic?
Biggest joke, please refrain your system nobody wants to buy Indian, and Pakistanis are the first ones to buy agricultural stuff from India. Correct me if i am wrong.
India a failed republic, i would rather say with so much poverty still existing i wonder they are no civil wars and still being controlled.
Its just 60 years for our independence and with the population we have, i feel its been handled well also looking at the corruption existing otherwise it would be a different story.
Its better we stop talking about crime, and financial laundering and USA would lead that far ahead. Well, if we talk about something let us also talking about india’s economic power.
I am happy for you atleast on one point you have compared and the author has compared us to China, instead of pakistan, which we indo-pak people commonly are known for.
Re: India - a failed Republic?
Don't get angry at me, the article was written by an Indian - V SUNDARAM. :)
Hindus burn train in Uttar Pradesh, India - Reuters
Hindu fanatics are causing a lot of communal tension in India's largest state - Uttar Pradesh.
Hindus burn train in Uttar Pradesh
Three coaches of a train were set ablaze in Uttar Pradesh on Thursday by right-wing Hindus demanding the release of their leader, but no one was hurt as the few passengers on board jumped to safety, officials said. The attack, in Mohammadabad town, 350 km east of Lucknow, the state capital, comes in the wake of Hindu-Muslim clashes in the nearby district of Gorakhpur where two people were killed earlier this week. A senior railway official, who declined to be identified, told Reuters a group of people chanting pro-Hindu slogans burnt the coaches of a train travelling from Mumbai to Gorakhpur. "The train was stopped and passengers jumped out of the affected coaches," he said. "Two coaches were completely gutted." Most passengers had disembarked at earlier stations.
A police official said the attackers were members of the right-wing group, Hindu Vahini, demanding the release of their leader, saffron-clad ascetic-turned-lawmaker Yogi Adityanath. Adityanath was arrested earlier this week for allegedly fuelling communal violence in Gorakhpur where rioters have set ablaze many buildings and vehicles. The clashes were triggered by a drunken scuffle between two wedding guests
Re: Hindus burn train in Uttar Pradesh, India - Reuters
Hindu extremism at its finest...